Prospecting, Examination and Description of Deposits - Exploration of Five Western Clay Deposits (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1739)

The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Norman L. Wimmler H. G. Iverson S. H. Lorain P. E. Oscarson S. Ricker
Organization:
The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers
Pages:
10
File Size:
745 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1948

Abstract

This paper has been prepared with the principal objective of recording the results of the Bureau of Mines exploration of five major clay deposits in the Western Region. It is based mainly on data contained in unpublished Bureau of Mines reports. Acknowledgment is made to the Federal Geological Survey for its cooperative work with the Bureau of Mines, to the various State geological and mining departments, and other State and local agencies. Clay Exploration by the Bureau of Mines Much has been written and published on clays and clay deposits relating to their refractory, ceramic, and other qualities but such literature is lacking in analyses of the available alumina content of the clays and provides little indication of their possibilities as a source of alumina. With this new objective in view, a great many of the known clay deposits were reexamined and new ones discovered. The Bureau of Mines made preliminary examination of numerous areas in the western United States. Five of those most favorably indicated were systematically drilled, and in each a large amount of high-alumina clay has been found. These five major projects are Molalla and Hobart Butte, in western Oregon; Cowlitz-Castle Rock, in southwestern Washington; Ione, in California; and the Olson-Troy area in Idaho (Fig. I). Preliminary scout drilling was done in the Stockton deposit at Coeur d'Alene, Idaho; the White ware deposit near Lewis-town, Mont.; and 13 areas in the Spokane or eastern Washington region, where the most favorably indicated area, known as the Excelsior, is now being drilled more systematically. Preliminary drilling was undertaken in numerous areas adjacent to the major deposits and others more remote. As a result, large additional clay possibilities were found. The Clay Deposits The clay deposits under consideration are of the sedimentary or transported types, parts of which have been altered further by the agencies of weathering, ground water, or hydrothermal action. There are extensive deposits of residual clays in northern Idaho and in eastern Washington, but they have been found to be low in the available alumina and to contain much free quartz, mica, and unaltered feldspar. To be of value, they must first be subjected to beneficiation to remove these gangue minerals. The sedimentary clays have been derived largely from the decomposition, erosion, and transportation of granites, gneisses, schists, and basalts. At Molalla, some
Citation

APA: Norman L. Wimmler H. G. Iverson S. H. Lorain P. E. Oscarson S. Ricker  (1948)  Prospecting, Examination and Description of Deposits - Exploration of Five Western Clay Deposits (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1739)

MLA: Norman L. Wimmler H. G. Iverson S. H. Lorain P. E. Oscarson S. Ricker Prospecting, Examination and Description of Deposits - Exploration of Five Western Clay Deposits (Mining Tech., Sept. 1944, T.P. 1739). The American Institute of Mining, Metallurgical, and Petroleum Engineers, 1948.

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